The βstaggeringβ cybersecurity weakness that isnβt getting enough focus, according to a top Secret Service official
The internet domain registration system is a major weakness that malicious hackers can exploit, but is often being overlooked, a senior Secret Service official said Thursday.
βIt is staggering to me that we live in a world where domain registrars and registrars will do bulk registration of various spellings of a major institutionβs brand name to create URLs to then use in phishing campaigns or in fraudulent advertising,β the official, Matt Noyes, said at a conference in Washington, D.C.
It was one of two areas Noyes identified as attack vectors that arenβt adequately being addressed during a panel at the 2026 Identity, Authentication and the Road Ahead Policy Forum, along with susceptibility to business email compromise scams.
The problem is in how the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) functions, he said. A decade ago, the United States relinquished its control of that process.
βItβs not discussed normally in polite company, but very important β¦ for the handful of people that engage in Internet governance,β Noyes said.
βThink about every phishing campaign that contains a link, whether thatβs sent by SMS or email,β he said. βThey want a URL that is deceptive. That is an identity weakness there in how internet assigned names and numbers function; there was not sufficient validation that the person registering that domain name has rights to that β owns a trade right.β
That forces companies like Microsoft and Google to seek court-ordered takedown operations on the βback end,β as Noyes described it. However, Noyes suggested that internet companies could address the problem proactively.
βThat is fundamentally a failure of internet governance that we have not created identity checks to ensure that when someone is registering names and numbers or concentrating a huge amount of abuse in fraudulent activity in particular ASN, autonomous system numbers, that itβs getting addressed and cleaned up,β he said. βThe major internet players in the U.S., they could change the nature of the internet and change the governance of that, to clean that up when thereβs a heavy concentration of abuse and fraud.β
That would involve not selling certain ads or showing certain results in web searches, Noyes said. βIt could be addressed that way, but thatβs that underpinning that gets neglected because itβs not in that direct consumer account interaction,β he said.
And on business email compromise, which involves sending fake emails to solicit fraudulent payments, βwe put implicit trust that the person we think weβre communicating with controls an email address routinely. That trust is not earned. The system isnβt designed that way.β
Business email compromise routinely accounts for a significant amount of internet-enabled fraud losses annually in the United States.
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